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  1. Past hour
  2. Content Article
    Independent online prescribing has expanded rapidly in recent years, driven by increased patient demand for convenience, long NHS waiting times for some services, and a broader shift toward digitally enabled models of care. This Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) investigation focuses on challenges for independent prescribing organisations in accessing clinical information held by the NHS to inform safe prescribing decisions for the patients who use their services. It also explores how gaps in NHS patient information about medication prescribed by independent prescribing organisations creates risks for the delivery of safe care. For both NHS and independent prescribing organisations, having limited information about a patient’s medical history and the medications they are being prescribed creates a challenge to making safe decisions about ongoing care and treatment. The investigation also explores the complex regulatory landscape within which independent prescribing organisations sit. In this regulatory framework, regulators may have jurisdiction over different aspects of a single independent prescribing organisations. The investigation explored the challenges this posed and the impact it had on these organisations’ ability to provide safe care. The findings of this investigation are offered to support the safe delivery of care for patients who use independent prescribing organisations and NHS services. Findings Independent prescribing organisations without an NHS contract do not typically have access to a patient’s NHS medical records. This can affect their ability to verify patient information. Some independent prescribing organisations use photos or videos of a patient’s NHS App to verify information about the patient’s medical history. This is beyond the purpose of the NHS App and creates patient safety risks as the app is not designed to hold a verified complete picture. Independent prescribing organisations have systems to identify multiple requests for medication from the same patient, address or payment method, but this information is not currently shared outside of their organisation. No independent prescribing organisations currently have ‘write access’ to patients’ NHS medical records – that is, the ability to enter information directly into a record. This creates the potential for gaps in medical records which can impact on the identification of potential contraindications (factors in an individual's condition or medical history that make it unwise to pursue a particular line of treatment) and complications. NHS GPs are being relied upon to provide clinical information to independent prescribing organisations but have limited capacity to provide this. The different approaches to such information requests also create uncertainty among GPs around whether the requests are legitimate and whether they should respond. Lack of access to patients’ NHS medical records is a barrier to independent prescribing organisations providing safe care in line with standards, regulations, and best practice. A large amount of data is gathered by independent prescribing organisations which could inform patient care, but there is no way to feed this back into the NHS. This data often relates to medications more commonly prescribed by independent prescribing organisations, such as those for weight loss, and has implications for understanding the safety of these medications. The Care Quality Commission and General Pharmaceutical Council have arrangements to work together in relation to organisations registered with both regulators, but these arrangements could be made clearer to providers. HSSIB makes the following safety recommendations HSSIB recommends that the Department of Health and Social Care develops a policy and implements a mechanism to enable appropriate NHS patient information to be shared with independent prescribing organisations. This is to ensure independent prescribing organisations can access verified patient information, with patients’ consent, to inform prescribing decisions. HSSIB recommends that the Department of Health and Social Care undertakes a review to explore the options and determine an appropriate mechanism for write access to health records for independent prescribing organisations. This would inform future developments such as the Single Patient Record, improve the currency of patient information held digitally by NHS organisations, and may remove some burden from general practices. HSSIB recommends that the Department of Health and Social Care works with relevant organisations, including Digital Clinical Excellence and the Coalition for Responsible Digital Health, to develop a framework to enable the sharing of safety critical information relating to patients known to multiple independent prescribing organisations. This would create a cross-organisational safeguard for patients who may be at risk of harm, and supporting safe prescribing. HSSIB makes the following safety observations Independent prescribing organisations can improve patient safety by ensuring that patient information contained in the NHS App is not used as a sole source of verification when making clinical decisions, as this is outside the purpose of the App and can result in patient safety risks. National healthcare organisations and independent prescribing organisations can improve patient safety by working together to design mechanisms for receiving information held by independent prescribing organisations. Such data may help to inform NHS care and provide insights into the safety profile of medications predominantly prescribed in the private sector.
  3. News Article
    Children who need life saving emergency surgery after a serious injury are almost six times more likely to die if in poorer countries than in wealthier ones, according to an international study led by the University of Cambridge. The research, published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, analysed 237 children aged 18 and under who underwent trauma laparotomy – emergency surgery for severe abdominal injuries – in 85 hospitals across 32 countries. Traumatic injuries, including those caused by road traffic accidents and violence, are among the leading causes of death and disability in children and adolescents worldwide. This study looked at children who needed emergency surgery for severe abdominal injuries, comparing their care and outcomes across hospitals around the world. Overall, 8% of children in the study died within 30 days of surgery. After taking account of differences between patients and settings, children treated in countries with lower levels of development were almost six times more likely to die than those treated in countries with higher levels of development. The study found major differences in the care children received, which are likely to be important in understanding why outcomes were worse in poorer countries. Children often faced longer delays before reaching hospital and before receiving surgery. They were also less likely to receive a blood transfusion, have a CT scan, receive medicine used to reduce bleeding, or be operated on by a consultant surgeon. Children also made up a larger share of these cases in poorer countries than in wealthier ones. This suggests that poorer countries may face a double challenge: more children needing emergency surgery after trauma, and less access to the care needed to treat them. Read full story Source: Surgery, 15 June 2026
  4. Content Article
    Friends and Family Test (FFT) gives patients the opportunity to submit feedback to providers of NHS funded care or treatment, using a simple question which asks how likely, on a scale ranging from extremely unlikely to extremely likely, they are to recommend the service to their friends and family if they needed similar care or treatment. Data on all these services is published on a monthly basis.
  5. News Article
    Mothers and newborns across the country will be better protected, as landmark patient safety measure Martha’s Rule will be rolled out to all maternity settings in England, following a string of serious and sustained failures at maternity wards in the Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH). Donna Ockenden’s review - the largest into maternity and neonatal services in NHS history - considered the experiences of maternity care for 2,500 families and found women ignored or complaints dismissed, missed opportunities to identify deteriorating patients and a culture of silencing both junior staff and parents. The government will commit to rolling out Martha’s Rule across maternity and neonatal wards in England to ensure every parent can request a rapid review from an independent medical team if a baby or mother’s condition is deteriorating and they are concerned this is not being responded to. The scheme - which is helping transform the NHS’s culture and has been rolled out for inpatients in every acute hospital in England - has already been piloted in 15 maternity and neonatal settings, with rollout to more expected this year. NHS data shows that there have already been over 2,100 calls to Martha’s Rule requiring changes in a patient’s treatment, with over 600 calls leading to potentially life-saving interventions to transfer them to enhanced levels of care. Read full story Source: Department of Health and Social Care, 24 June 2026
  6. Content Article
    "It is difficult for most people to understand the current outbreak information. Ebola messaging should be in local languages to allow everyone to understand." This statement from a community respondent in a recent Uganda Alliance of Patients' Organisations (UAPO) consultation captures a critical lesson from decades of Ebola response efforts: communities are not passive beneficiaries of outbreak interventions; they are essential partners in preparedness, detection, and response. Despite significant advances in Ebola surveillance, diagnostics, vaccination, and clinical management, outbreaks continue to expose persistent gaps in trust, communication and community engagement. In June 2026, UAPO conducted a rapid community consultation involving 91 respondents from 15 districts across Uganda, complemented by discussions with young people and community leaders. The consultation sought to understand community perceptions, concerns, barriers and priorities related to the ongoing Ebola outbreak in Uganda and the DRC. In the article attached, Dr Anne Naguudi and Joshua Wamboga from UAPO discuss these findings, which reveal a clear message: communities want to move from being recipients of information to active partners in outbreak preparedness and response. The findings reinforce a lesson repeatedly demonstrated throughout Ebola's history: communities are not the problem to be managed; they are the solution to be empowered. Communities want accurate information, equitable access to healthcare, protection from stigma and meaningful participation in decisions that affect their lives. They want trusted communication, social protection and opportunities to contribute to surveillance, preparedness, and response efforts. The message to governments, WHO, donors and global health partners is clear: sustainable Ebola preparedness and response requires moving beyond consultation toward genuine partnership. By investing in trusted local leadership, patient organizations, inclusive communication, and community-led preparedness structures, we can build responses that are not only more effective but also more equitable, resilient, and people-centred.
  7. Yesterday
  8. Content Article
    'Stranded costs' are fixed expenses that remain when services are reduced or shifted—for example, from hospitals to community care. This article argues that while the NHS recognises the problem of stranded costs, it lacks a clear strategy to deal with them. As care models change, funding follows activity but underlying hospital costs (like estates, staffing, and long-term contracts) cannot easily shrink, creating financial losses that discourage transformation. This structural issue is reinforced by payment systems that reward activity rather than enabling transition, meaning efficiency gains rarely translate into real savings. The authors suggest the NHS must explicitly identify stranded costs, fund the transition to new models, and pair reforms with clear plans to decommission old services; otherwise, ambitious transformation policies will continue to fail in practice.
  9. News Article
    The report of the Nottingham maternity inquiry, published on Wednesday, makes for harrowing reading. The review includes 520 cases involving babies and mothers who died or suffered catastrophic harm as a result of care failings at maternity units under the Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust. Failings were “hauntingly consistent” for more than a decade, said Donna Ockenden, the senior midwife who led the inquiry, with “concerns suppressed, incidents downgraded, and the voices of women, particularly the most vulnerable, systematically dismissed”. Women and staff were bullied and gaslit, with some told they were imagining their pain. The damning assessment continues throughout 400 pages of heartbreaking detail. But at the core of the report is the message that the NHS has once again failed to take proper care of women. The Nottingham inquiry is the fifth major review of maternity failings in the UK since the 2015 report into Morecambe Bay Hospitals. Next week, another government-commissioned rapid national review of maternity services at 14 NHS trusts is due to be published, amid concerns about the overall treatment of women and babies in these settings. And another two inquiries, also led by Ockenden, will take place into suspected maternal failings at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and University Hospitals Sussex NHS Trust. The Nottingham scandal is, quite clearly, not an isolated case – and the report is a scathing indictment of the poor maternity care given to thousands of women across the country. The common thread running through all of these reports is the institutional failure by the NHS to listen to women or prioritise their safety and, as a result, the safety of their babies. As the report said, “Listening to women is not simply an important principle of maternity care; it is its foundation.” Read full story Source: The Independent, 24 June 2026
  10. News Article
    Breast cancer cases among women under the age of 50 have seen a 5 per cent increase in just one year, according to new analysis. This concerning rise comes as the charity CoppaFeel! claims that younger individuals presenting with symptoms of the disease are "routinely dismissed" by healthcare professionals. In response, the charity is advocating for the adoption of a seven-minute risk assessment. This proposed tool would consider factors such as family history to identify those who might benefit from earlier or more frequent breast screening. Currently, the NHS offers women mammograms – an X-ray of the breast – from their 50th birthday until they turn 71. According to its new report, one in six people diagnosed with breast cancer are aged 49 and under. Diagnoses in people under 30 jumped by 78% from 2001 to 2019 and from 2022 to 2023, breast cancer rates increased by 5 per cent among 25 to 49 year olds. The charity said patients diagnosed with breast cancer under 50 are almost twice as likely to have late-stage cancer compared with someone in their 60s, while under 25s are more than twice as likely to be diagnosed with late-stage disease. Sophie Dopierala-Bull, director of services and engagement, CoppaFeel!, said: “Early diagnosis depends too heavily on whether young people know their bodies, whether they feel confident seeking help, whether they can access healthcare, and whether they are taken seriously when they get there. Read full story Source: The Independent, 25 June 2026
  11. Content Article
    This report summarises a World Health Organization (WHO) technical consultation focused on strengthening newborn screening, diagnosis and management of birth defects within national health systems in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Conducted through a series of global consultations between 2024 and 2025, the initiative examined state-led programmes and operational models from front-runner LMICs and selected upper-middle-income countries. The report addresses the growing contribution of birth defects to child mortality and disability as infectious causes of death decline, emphasising the need for LMICs to integrate newborn screening, diagnosis, management and long-term care for one or a few priority conditions into routine health services and universal health coverage.
  12. News Article
    Horrific failings led to 520 mothers and babies in Nottingham suffering harm or dying, sparking calls for a public inquiry into maternity care across England. In all, 444 women and 76 newborn babies suffered “potentially avoidable” outcomes, a damning three-year long review of the biggest childbirth scandal in NHS history concluded. James Murray, the health secretary, said the nature and scale of the failings exposed by Donna Ockenden’s report on maternity services at Nottingham University hospitals NHS trust (NUH) between 2012 and 2025 were “horrific” and “chilling”. Families suffered “dangerously and tragically deficient care at almost every turn” and “the NHS failed them catastrophically”, said Murray. He was “devastated” and “heartbroken” to read Ockenden’s 401-page account of the “neglect, incompetence, racism, discrimination, contempt and harassment that so many suffered”. Ockenden, a respected maternity safety expert, painted a stark and detailed picture of maternity care at NUH’s two hospitals, Queen’s medical centre and Nottingham city hospital. “Multiple” women experienced dangerously poor and sometimes “cruel” care there, understaffing was routine, lessons from patient safety incidents were not learned, and bullying by “intimidating cliques” of staff was rife, she found. The Nottingham Maternity Families group, which represents about 600 harmed and bereaved families, asked Keir Starmer to establish a statutory public inquiry to investigate failings in maternity and neonatal care across the entire NHS “because safe care can only be consistently delivered when the full truth is known”. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 24 June 2026
  13. News Article
    High-profile cases of staff snooping on patients’ health records, as most recently exposed by HSJ, have revealed “a worrying trend” across the NHS rather than just isolated incidences, a watchdog chief has warned. The Information Commissioner’s Office boss made the remarks in a 700-word blog posted just hours after HSJ revealed more than 1,400 reports of “unauthorised access” to patient data had been reported to the ICO since 2019. Paul Arnold wrote in the blog: “Recent high-profile cases point not to isolated incidents but to a worrying trend that requires a serious response across the healthcare sector.” “I believe this is primarily a cultural challenge. When a local incident becomes national news – a serious crime, a public tragedy, a story that captures widespread attention – there is an increased risk that healthcare staff could be tempted to look at records they have no reason to view.” He urged healthcare leaders to “ask yourself honestly whether your organisation is doing enough to prevent unauthorised access before it happens” and to remind staff of the importance of patient confidentiality when a high-profile incident happens. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 24 June 2026
  14. News Article
    A pioneering technology inspired by Harry Potter that uses augmented reality (AR) to guide families through cleft lip surgery has received widespread recognition. The app works like The Daily Prophet, the wizarding newspaper in Harry Potter, famous for its animated, moving pictures. Professor Steven Lo, a consultant plastic surgeon with NHS Greater Glasgow’s Canniesburn Plastic Surgery Unit and Innovation Fellow at the West of Scotland Innovation Hub, led the project alongside Professor Paul Chapman, director of Emerging Technology at The Glasgow School of Art. Their efforts were highly commended at the Scottish Knowledge Exchange Awards. Professor Steven Lo said: ‘We took inspiration from the newspapers in Harry Potter, which come to life to tell a story. We wanted to give patients’ families the opportunity to learn more about what was going on in a visual way. Around 20% of the population have literacy challenges, meaning they cannot read or write, and about 40% say they don’t understand medical terms. We also have patients who don’t speak English as a first language, and those with dyslexia, so we wanted to bridge that gap and provide something that everyone could understand and benefit from.’ The team co-developed the Cleft Lip Education through Augmented Reality (CLEAR) programme, which employs a completely visual form of communication, overcoming barriers caused by language, literacy, dyslexia, and learning difficulties. By scanning a specially designed leaflet with a smartphone or tablet, patients and families can view a lifelike, animated 3D model that guides them through the surgical process. This is designed to help to reduce anxiety and enhance understanding ahead of their child’s operation. Read full story Source: Surgery, 13 May 2026
  15. Content Article
    In THIS Institute’s 2026 Annual Lecture, Mary Dixon-Woods explores whether improvement and innovation can help save the NHS, and what it will take to turn ambition into meaningful, system-wide reform. While acknowledging the scale and persistence of the problems facing the NHS, Mary argues that meaningful reform remains possible if efforts are grounded in evidence, collaboration and system-wide coordination. The lecture examines the current fragmented approach to innovation and improvement and warned that the enthusiasm to adopt digital technologies and AI often outpaces proper testing, implementation planning and evaluation. Read the discussion on this in our hub Community area
  16. News Article
    It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of Alex. He died peacefully at home on Wednesday 13 May 2026 after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. His beloved wife Donna was by his side. Alex started his career as a hospital porter (a job he loved) and went on to develop a distinguished career, being awarded a PhD and becoming a Professor of Human Factors. Alex served with integrity as the president of the Chartered Institute of Human Factors and won many awards for his work, including the Prince Michael award. Working with Alex for some 16 years has always been a pleasure and a privilege. Alex was the science auditor on the Patient Safety Learning 'Why investigate?' blog series, including authoring Making wrong decisions when we think they are the right decisions. He was a force in introducing real human factors into healthcare, rather than the pseudoscience that pervades the domain. Collaborating with Alex in training police and other safety critical people it was apparent that he impressed all. Compliments from barristers, police officers and safety directors from many industries flooded in. As his ethics advisor on his projects, I had little to do. The Human Factors community gathered this week in his home town to say goodbye and, along with the sadness and admiration of his wife’s bravery, all said the same – Alex was, at all times, professional, honest and of the very highest integrity. Alex is a great loss to healthcare, Human Factors, and science. Dr Martin Langham & Professor Graham Edgar. Alex Stedmon
  17. Content Article
    On the 18 June 2026, the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) published a new report summarising a rapid investigation focused on patient safety issues within a regional care system. It looked specifically at a case where multiple organisations were involved in providing care across a care pathway. In this blog, Patient Safety Learning’s Associate Director Claire Cox sets out reflections on the report’s findings. The most recent HSSIB learning report on patient safety across regional care pathways offers an important, if uncomfortable, insight into the realities of delivering care across organisational boundaries. While framed as learning, the findings expose fundamental gaps in oversight, clarity and system leadership, which pose significant risks to patient safety. A care pathway is a structured, evidence-based framework that describes the sequence of care and interventions a patient should receive for a particular condition, population group or healthcare need. It sets out how different services and professionals work together to deliver coordinated, high-quality care across the patient's journey. The HSSIB investigation examined a redesigned regional pathway involving multiple organisations and a centralised specialist service. However, the report deliberately omits specific details of the pathway, organisations and patient group involved. While this is understandable from a confidentiality perspective, it creates a key limitation: without a clear understanding of the full patient journey, it becomes much harder to articulate where risks emerge, accumulate and, ultimately, result in harm. The invisible patient journey One of the most striking issues raised by the report is the system’s inability to fully understand or monitor patient harm across the pathway. This is perhaps unsurprising. Care pathways that span multiple organisations are non-linear, dynamic systems, where risks rarely arise at a single point. Instead, harm often reflects latent system failures, decisions, constraints or assumptions made early in the pathway that only manifest much later. The investigation highlights several critical system weaknesses: Differences between how the pathway was designed and how it actually operated. A lack of shared understanding between organisations about what the pathway could realistically deliver. Limitations in the technology and digital systems used to support the pathway. Limited data sharing and inconsistent performance insight across providers. These issues are particularly evident in the technology underpinning the pathway, where a lack of interoperability between organisational digital systems means critical patient information is not consistently shared or visible across services. In practice, this results in manual workarounds, duplication and reliance on incomplete data. The safety implications are significant: clinicians are often making decisions without a full understanding of a patient’s history, delays occur in accessing or transferring information and opportunities for proactive intervention are reduced. Collectively, this creates a scenario where no single organisation holds a complete picture of the patient journey, meaning emerging harm cannot be reliably identified. From a patient perspective, it is reasonable to expect far greater visibility of the pathway they are moving through—not just who is providing their care, but how that care is organised end-to-end. This includes clarity on what the pathway looks like, the key decision points that may affect their treatment, and how and when care may escalate if their condition changes. They might also reasonably expect to know how risks to their safety are being identified, shared and actively managed across organisations. Without this transparency, patients are effectively navigating a system that is opaque, fragmented and difficult to understand. In such circumstances, meaningful collaboration becomes extremely challenging. Shared decision making depends on a shared understanding of both the clinical situation and the system through which care is delivered. Similarly, where risks are not visible to patients, there can be no clear line of accountability for how those risks are mitigated. If care pathways are to function safely across organisational boundaries, they must be understandable not only to professionals within the system but also to the patients who rely on them. The accountability gap A consistent theme throughout the HSSIB report is the absence of sustained oversight. Although a cross-organisational implementation board initially existed, oversight from the Integrated Care Board (ICB) reduced before the pathway was fully embedded. The consequences were predictable: No shared governance framework post-implementation. No agreed evaluation plan. Limited escalation of risks. Disconnected data and performance monitoring. This reflects a classic system failure: accountability without ownership. If no organisation or system leader maintains end-to-end ownership of a pathway, then: Risks fall between organisational boundaries. Mitigations are inconsistent or absent. Learning is localised rather than system wide. As highlighted by another HSSIB report last year, there is a lack of clarity about how patient safety is managed between ICBs other healthcare providers, including lines of safety accountability. This leads directly to gaps in oversight of cross-organisational safety risks. Implementation versus reality: the risk of 'work as imagined' Another critical safety issue is the mismatch between the pathway as designed ('work as imagined') and its real-world operation ('work as done'). The report highlights: A business case that was not fully realised. Resource assumptions (e.g. bed capacity) that did not materialise. Divergent expectations among organisations about pathway capability. This is not a minor operational issue, it is a core patient safety risk. When services are designed based on assumptions that are not delivered in practice: Demand exceeds capacity. Access thresholds shift informally. ·Staff are forced into workarounds. Clinical decision-making becomes inconsistent. Over time, this creates unstandardised care and inequity of access, both of which were flagged as concerns in the investigation. Culture, communication and friction The report also surfaces issues that are often underplayed in pathway redesign, relationships and behaviours between teams. Findings include: Differences in risk perception between organisations. Disagreements affecting clinical decisions. Examples of incivility. Barriers to shared learning. Lack of interoperability between organisation digital systems. These are not 'soft issues', they are direct contributors to patient harm. Where communication breaks down: Information is lost or misinterpreted. Decisions are delayed. Trust erodes across organisational boundaries. In cross-system pathways, psychological safety and collaboration are as critical as infrastructure and process design. What could strengthen learning? While the report provides valuable system-level insights, there is an opportunity to go further in translating findings into practical improvement. Two approaches could add depth: 1. After Action Review (AAR) at system level A structured, multi-agency AAR could: Reconstruct the pathway end-to-end. Identify where assumptions diverged from reality. Surface latent conditions contributing to risk. Build shared understanding across organisations. This would move learning from 'what happened' to 'why it made sense at the time'. 2. Transformative (tabletop) simulation Given the complexity of regional pathways, simulation offers a powerful way to: Test proposed improvements in a safe environment. Explore system stress points (capacity, transfers, escalation). Identify unintended consequences before implementation. In effect, simulation allows systems to experience the pathway as patients do across boundaries, not within silos. The role of integrated care boards: a system risk? Perhaps the most significant implication of this report is what it reveals about the current maturity of system oversight. ICBs are expected to: Commission across pathways. Ensure safety across organisational boundaries. Use data to drive improvement. However, the report evidences: Limited access to consistent safety data. Reduced capacity following structural changes. Difficulty maintaining ongoing oversight of complex pathways. Again this is not an new issue and is a theme that we have seen in previous HSSIB investigations, including a report last year looking at the implementation of the Patient Safety Incident Response Framework. This raises a critical question: do current system structures have the capability and capacity to oversee patient safety at pathway level? If the answer is uncertain, then this is itself is patient safety risk, one that is largely invisible to the public. How might the emerging quality strategy address this? The forthcoming NHS Quality Strategy presents a critical opportunity to address many of the systemic issues highlighted in this report, particularly the fragmentation of safety across organisational boundaries. The 10 Year Health Plan stated that alongside the National Quality Board its aim would be to address a crowded and unclear quality landscape and provide a single and authoritative determination of quality. This aligns directly with the need identified here: clearer expectations, better measurement and more coherent oversight across systems. However, emerging national discussion suggests there are still important gaps to resolve, including concerns about whether patient safety will be given sufficient prominence, and whether expectations for providers and system leaders will be clear enough to drive meaningful change. If the Strategy is to respond effectively to the risks identified in this HSSIB investigation, it must move beyond treating safety as one dimension of quality and instead position it as a central organising principle of system design. This creates a significant opportunity to design cross-system safety into: service planning service delivery accountability frameworks performance management data capture and intelligence. Without this, there is a real risk that existing fragmentation is reinforced: where metrics are numerous but unaligned, accountability remains diffuse, and no single entity holds responsibility for understanding risk across the whole patient journey. Conversely, a coherent and safety-led strategy could provide the support needed for ICBs and providers to jointly own pathway outcomes, supported by shared data, stronger governance and clearer system leadership. The absence of prescriptive targets may offer flexibility but it also increases the importance of how strongly patient safety is prioritised and operationalised in practice. Final reflection This HSSIB report highlights a fundamental truth: patient safety does not solely reside within organisations; it resides within pathways. The 10 Year Health Plan for England envisions a significant shift in the coming years towards more neighbourhood and system-based models. As this transition takes place, the risks identified in this report will only become more pronounced. Without clear end-to-end ownership, shared data and intelligence, robust evaluation, and strong cross-system leadership, we risk designing pathways that look coherent on paper but are fragile in practice, and where safety is too often an afterthought. The forthcoming NHS Quality Strategy could potentially present a opportunity to tackle these issues, designing for safety, to ensure safe outcomes, processes and behaviours. The challenge now is not simply to learn from this report but to recognise that these issues are unlikely to be isolated. They are systemic and they demand a system-level response.
  18. Last week
  19. Event
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    Supporting the adoption and sustainability of innovation at scale is essential for improving health and care systems to implement innovation to create a healthier population. Yet, successful innovation often depends on retiring old practices. This session will include: Health Innovation Wessex's evidence-based four pillars model and how you can apply it Insights and strategies to de-risk transformation Practical tools to save time, reduce costs, and enable innovation to flourish. Speakers: Philippa Darnton, Director of Insight, Health Innovation Wessex Andrew Sibley, Programme Manager, Evaluation (Mixed Methods), Health Innovation Wessex Patrick Arnold, Programme Manager, Innovation Adoption, Health Innovation Wessex. Register
  20. Content Article
    The number of hospital beds has decreased by a third in the past 25 years, as hospital stays have become shorter. However, admissions are rising, especially for groups such as the frail elderly.. This is one of the main causes for the growing pressure on hospital beds. The NHS publishes figures for NHS trusts giving the average percentage of hospital beds that are occupied. These figures disguise the highs and lows in occupancy that occur week by week and season by season. According to these figures, the NHS has an average occupancy rate of just over 85%. When occupancy rates rise above 85% it can start to affect the quality of care provided to patients and the orderly running of the hospital. This analysis from Dr Foster calculates the number of patients in hospital each day and compares it to the number of beds the hospital says it has available. The figures reveal the extent to which occupancy varies from the low points at weekends and during bank holidays to the high points, when occupancy rates at some hospitals can reach 100%. The analysis shows that the average mid-week occupancy in the NHS is 88%, and that for most of the year most NHS hospitals are experiencing occupancy rates above 90%.
  21. News Article
    NHS executives and other staff who refuse to engage with investigations into maternity care failures could be sent to prison for up to two years under new government proposals. The requirement to engage with maternity reviews will apply to existing and former NHS staff, and to the ongoing inquiries at Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust and University Hospitals Sussex Foundation Trust. The announcement by health secretary James Murray came as Donna Ockenden published her 400-page report into care failings at Nottingham University Hospitals Trust. This makes 18 specific recommendations for national action and criticises the trust’s leadership for its arrogance and the service for not learning from past inquiries (see below). Health secretary James Murray said the government would compel staff to give evidence “to end a culture of secrecy and prevent further harm”. He added: “This action will help ensure the reviews in Leeds and Sussex are fair and comprehensive, so that uncovering the truth does not rely solely on those who choose to come forward voluntarily. Those who refuse to do so or deliberately withhold information about failures could face up to two years in prison.” Ms Ockenden’s report reveals that ”66 former and current” senior NUH staff were approached to contribute to the investigation. However, despite being ”contacted on multiple occasions”, only 37 came forward, 35 of which were interviewed. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 24 June 2026
  22. Content Article
    The Independent review of maternity services at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust was commissioned in June 2022 and looks at the provision of maternity and neonatal care at the Trust between 2012 and 2025. More than 2,500 families and over 800 staff have contributed to this review. It concluded that there were potentially avoidable outcomes relating to 444 maternity cases examined up to May 2025, alongside 76 neonatal cases. Key issues identified in this report include insufficient staffing and funding across perinatal care settings; the inability of staff to undertake even basic (often, mandatory) training; a persistent failure to listen to and believe mothers and fathers; and a corresponding failure to investigate, and therefore learn from, mistakes. The Review identifies 18 immediate and essential actions to improve care and safety in maternity services across England, which are summarised below: 1. Strengthening women-centred communication and informed choice All women must be provided with clear, consistent and accessible information throughout pregnancy to support informed decision-making. This should include information about labour and birth, pain relief options in labour, anaesthetic care for operative delivery, and the potential benefits and risks of different interventions. 2. Support a nationally agreed perinatal workforce planning methodology as a critical enabler of perinatal improvement at pace and scale Investment should be made in the development and implementation of a robust, evidence-based workforce planning tool across perinatal services. The tool should move beyond birth rates alone to reflect population complexity, including factors such as maternal age, co-morbidities, deprivation, acuity and service configuration. 3. National immediate and essential actions labour ward coordinator (LWC) role Implement a nationally recognised LWC programme for all Band 7 LWC midwives undertaking the LWC role. Provide structured opportunities and support to achieve the competencies and standards outlined across the six domains of the national LWC Framework. Introduce 360-degree feedback for all LWCs to support reflection, performance development and understanding of the impact of behaviour on the multidisciplinary team. 4. All trusts must support training for midwives in the use of speculum examination All Trusts must ensure that midwives are supported to achieve local training competencies to perform speculum examinations for women at any gestation of pregnancy, with clear escalation pathways for women in pre-term labour or those requiring immediate ongoing care. 5. Enhanced maternal care All staff caring for pregnant women must receive regular, structured multidisciplinary training to ensure timely recognition and effective management of the deteriorating woman. Training must equip midwives, obstetricians, anaesthetists, critical care teams and outreach services with the skills, knowledge and confidence to deliver safe, high-quality enhanced maternal care. National education programmes must cover key areas of maternal care and include the recognition and management of lesser-known but clinically important conditions, such as maternal ketosis, to ensure consistent, safe and excellent care across all maternity services. 6. Delivering safe, personalised and equitable maternity care through early risk recognition, coordinated care and responsive services All Trusts must ensure women receive the appropriate ‘safety-netting’ within their care, enabling them to access services and treatments, including the consideration of reducing barriers to enable to the provision of safe maternity care. 7. National standard for standardisation and recording of fetal growth risk assessment There must be standardisation of fetal growth risk assessment, management and audit across RCOG, SBLCB and NICE guidance, with clear concise recommendations on the choice of pathways and charts to ensure consistency of the approach to the reduction in stillbirth. All practitioners performing ultrasound growth scans should have training to undertake and report examinations to meet the standardised methods used in the recommended charts. 8. There must be a national standard and documentation for maternity triage and record keeping in maternity care provision Trusts must develop a robust method of training for midwives providing triage care. This must include minimum competency standards for telephone risk assessment, agreed pathways for mandatory attendance for review and a holistic review of physical, mental and social wellbeing assessment. Suppliers of Electronic Patient Record (EPR) systems must ensure there is a standardised national maternity handover tool that addresses interoperability gaps between Trust systems. All Trusts must implement the standardised national Maternity Early Warning System (MEWS) with clearly defined escalation pathways wherever they are being cared for. 9. Support the development and implementation of a structured assessment framework for the latent phase of labour, ensuring clarity when the ‘latent phase of labour’ becomes abnormal requiring escalation Develop and implement a structured assessment framework for the latent phase of labour, incorporating maternal and fetal wellbeing, the woman’s preferences and narrative, social circumstances, potential barriers to accessing care (e.g. language or socioeconomic factors), time of day, and distance from the unit when determining the appropriateness of admission. 10. All Trusts must define criteria for the safe use of telephone postnatal follow-up, indicating when telephone follow-up is acceptable or when face-to-face follow-up is mandatory The first risk assessment for this should be documented in the woman’s notes in the antenatal period (by 34 weeks gestation), and the risk assessment reviewed before postnatal discharge from the hospital, and after every postnatal community visit. 11. National standard for obstetric anaesthetic record-keeping All Trusts must introduce and use standardised approaches to key areas of maternity anaesthetic care to reduce variation and improve outcomes. An agreed minimum standard for obstetric anaesthetic documentation must be implemented. This should include routine recording of intra-operative pain scores and accompanying narrative log, particularly during unexpected or critical events. 12. Safe, accessible and comprehensive maternity anaesthetic documentation All Trusts must strengthen maternal anaesthetic and critical care documentation, ensuring it is clear, contemporaneous and readily accessible, ideally within a single unified electronic patient record. Documentation must capture all relevant multidisciplinary discussions and care plans, and be woman centred, reflecting the woman’s needs, preferences, and involvement in decisions. 13. Department of Health and Social Care/NHS England (DHSC/NHSE) should introduce and support access to coordinated multidisciplinary debrief and psychological support. DHSC/NHSE must support Trusts to ensure that maternity services provide timely, accessible psychological support for women and families following traumatic events. This must include clear referral pathways, adequately resourced specialist provision, and processes that proactively identify and respond to unmet emotional and psychological needs 14. Funding for implementation of maternity Patient Safety Incident Reporting Framework (PSIRF) DHSC/NHSE must provide adequate funding to address the systemic resource gap that prevents Trusts from operationalising new national policy, enabling women and families to experience safer, more consistent care, with improvement demonstrated through full implementation, audit compliance, and sustained delivery of required standards. DHSC/NHSE should develop clear maternity-specific definitions and guidance on patient-safety incidents to resolve national inconsistency in interpretation, ensuring women and families receive transparent and accurate reporting of harm, with improvement evidenced by nationally standardised grading and reliable national data. 15. Strengthened multidisciplinary governance and learning All Trusts must ensure protected time for multidisciplinary governance, review and learning. This must include learning from both adverse events and examples of good practice to support continuous improvement in the quality and safety of care provided to women. Learning from neonatal PSIRF investigations should be considered alongside maternity investigations, recognising the opportunities for shared learning across perinatal services. 16. Foster a compassionate, psychologically safe, and learning culture All Trusts must actively foster a culture of safety, compassion and respect across all maternity services. Staff must feel supported to speak up and raise concerns without fear of reprisal. Women must feel listened to, respected, and fully involved in decisions about their care. Trusts must promote compassionate leadership, a civil and kind workplace, and the use of positive feedback as a tool to reinforce good practice and drive continuous improvement. A psychologically safe and learning culture is essential to improving clinical outcomes, supporting staff wellbeing and enhancing the experiences of women and their families. 17. DHSC/NHSE should recommend and support recruitment processes and implement a consistent onboarding package for new starters Trusts must streamline recruitment processes and implement a consistent onboarding package for all staff involved in the delivery of perinatal care with named supervision and support during initial shifts. 18. All Trusts to ensure compliance, audited annually, with the NHS Records Management Code of Practice post-death care The report also notes that in post-death care, Trusts should cease the practice of conducting post mortem examinations anywhere except the mortuary. They should ensure all investigations or reviews into after-death care include an independent post-death care specialist. Nationally there should be statutory regulation of Anatomical Pathology Technologists introduced.
  23. Content Article
    This little book of poetry came about after two NHS hospital consultants, working in the South Wales Valleys, gave expression to feelings and personal experiences generated by Covid. "Reflections through the Waves" provides an acknowledgement of the suffering of so many during this crisis, as well as a thought-provoking insight into what really matters in life, hope for a better future and an appreciation of some pretty fantastic people in society. 
  24. Content Article
    This page advises healthcare professionals working within the community, care homes or hospital environments on how to reduce the risks of hot weather to the health of people they provide care for.
  25. Content Article
    Some people will rejoice at the thought of hot weather coming our way. But for nursing staff, keeping hydrated while at work can bring another challenge to already busy days. Royal College of Nursing Head of Health, Safety and Wellbeing Kim Sunley answers your questions on this key subject.
  26. News Article
    Most IVF “add-on” treatments sold to people hoping to boost their chances of having children are not backed by reliable evidence, fail to boost fertility and may be a complete waste of money, the largest study of its kind has concluded. There has been a surge in extra procedures, medicines or techniques offered to patients in addition to standard IVF with bold claims they will increase the probability of success. Take-up is widespread, with more than 70% of IVF patients in the UK, Australia and New Zealand paying for one or more add-on during IVF treatment. But the world’s most comprehensive review into their effectiveness – and the evidence behind them – found the majority show no effect on fertility or remain inconclusive due to limited or low-quality data. Unproven add-ons also lead to false hope, greater financial strain and needless medical procedures at what is already a difficult time for patients, experts behind the research said. The findings were published in The Lancet Obstetrics, Gynaecology & Women’s Health journal. “In many countries, infertility care is largely provided by private clinics where IVF is highly commercialised, and some add-ons are extremely expensive,” said Dr Sarah Lensen of the University of Melbourne. “Our review finds a lack of evidence that most of the IVF add-ons we assessed provide any benefit to patients. Unproven add-ons can lead to false hope, greater financial strain and unnecessary medical procedures at what already can be a very difficult time for patients.” Read full story Source: The Guardian, 23 June 2026
  27. News Article
    Mollie Sutton has spent the past seven years waiting for answers. Her son Rupert, aged 7, was born with severe disabilities and is now unable to walk or talk. He also has the mental capability of a four-month-old baby. Ms Sutton, 27, endured a harrowing labour before Rupert’s birth and believes failures by Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust, both before and during her labour, may have caused his severe physical and mental disabilities. She is one of hundreds of families now seeking answers as to why their babies died or were left with disabilities at Nottingham hospitals. An inquiry by Dame Donna Ockenden, which has looked at thousands of cases of alleged poor care at the hands of the trust, is due to publish a report into its failings on Wednesday as part of what has become the largest ever maternity review in NHS history. Ms Sutton told The Independent: “This can't continue to happen. How many more dead babies, dead mothers, harmed babies, harmed mothers do we have to see until somebody actually finally puts their foot down and does something about it?” It was in September 2018, at 34 weeks pregnant, that Ms Sutton was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with sepsis. Three weeks later, at 37 weeks, her labour was induced. Ms Sutton, who was aged 19 at the time of the birth, described the intense pain she experienced during her labour. But she believes her begs for help were ignored due to her age. “I was begging for pain relief. But I was told that I'm only two centimetres – I'm being dramatic. ‘I don't know why you're screaming because there are women on this ward with real problems,” she said. At 4am, Ms Sutton, alone with her husband, said the baby suddenly seemed close to arrival so her husband pressed the emergency buzzer. Midwives came running into the ward, Ms Sutton remembers. The curtains had to remain wide open due to the number of people, and Ms Sutton says she was given no dignity at all. Ms Sutton is now waiting to find out whether her son’s disabilities were caused by her care during and after her labour. But, as she awaits a report from the Nottingham inquiry team and a separate one from NUH, she said she wants urgent change. She said: “They [the government, regulators and NHS] knew what was happening and they did nothing to stop it. The [watchdogs] CQC, the GMC, the NMC, and previous secretaries of state, they all knew what was happening. And they should be held accountable in a judge-led inquiry.” Read full story Source: The Independent, 24 June 2026
  28. News Article
    A “fundamental failure in quality governance” has led NHS England to take enforcement action against one of England’s largest trusts. NHSE has decided to intervene at Northern Care Alliance Foundation Trust because it believes the provider is “unable to provide assurance” that it has a “clear and consistent quality governance structure across the whole organisation that will ensure no further patients may suffer harm”. A letter to the trust from NHSE North West regional director Louise Shepherd said: “There have been a series of escalating quality concerns over the previous 18 months, for which [the trust] has been unable to respond at the expected pace… The culmination of quality concerns and [the trust’s] response has resulted from a fundamental failure in quality governance.” Greater Manchester Integrated Care Board placed the trust in a “rapid quality review process” in January over concerns that it has made insufficient progress to remedy care failings identified by two independent reviews into its spinal services. The trust then commissioned the Good Governance Institute to undertake a review. It produced 43 recommendations and found NCA lacked a “clear and consistent quality governance structure to ensure patients would not suffer harm”. In September, the Care Quality Commission issued a warning notice to the trust following an inspection of Salford’s surgical services. It said NCA had not ensured surgical wards had sufficient and suitably qualified staff, as well as effective risk-management systems. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 23 June 2026
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